Paper
6 October 2010 Demonstration of shaping an aspheric from an ultra-thin spherical mirror using active supports
Chunmei Zeng, Jingchi Yu, Peiji Guo
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 7655, 5th International Symposium on Advanced Optical Manufacturing and Testing Technologies: Advanced Optical Manufacturing Technologies; 76552N (2010) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.867719
Event: 5th International Symposium on Advanced Optical Manufacturing and Testing Technologies, 2010, Dalian, China
Abstract
Future space telescopes require primary mirrors that have larger apertures and less mass than the current ones. To reduce the mass as much as possible, ultra-thin aspheric glass mirrors are used for the optical surface and a rigid, lightweight frame with actuators for support. The accuracy of the optical surface is actively maintained by adjusting the actuators. On the other hand, the ultra-thin spherical glass mirrors can be utilized to shape aspheric ones based on same active optics technology. The method can avoid the difficulty of manufacture and measure for large aspheric surface mirrors. We have built a measurement system for shaping a parabolic surface using a 340mm diameter ultra-thin spherical mirror. According to an existing active support system the theoretical accuracy of parabolic surface figure is presented. The test results show that the method of shaping aspheric ones from spherical surfaces is fully feasible: the surface quality is λ/5 RMS, which is in accord with the simulation analysis. If the best fitting sphere and the array of actuators be suitably chosen, and the initial figure accuracy of ultra-thin spherical surfaces can be increased, the accuracy of shaping aspheric surface will be improved.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chunmei Zeng, Jingchi Yu, and Peiji Guo "Demonstration of shaping an aspheric from an ultra-thin spherical mirror using active supports", Proc. SPIE 7655, 5th International Symposium on Advanced Optical Manufacturing and Testing Technologies: Advanced Optical Manufacturing Technologies, 76552N (6 October 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.867719
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Aspheric lenses

Spherical lenses

Actuators

Glasses

Active optics

Optical spheres

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